Scientists Generate Electricity from Viruses
Imagine charging your phone as you walk, thanks to a paper-thin
generator embedded in the sole of your shoe. This futuristic scenario is
now a little closer to reality. Scientists from the U.S. Department of
Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have
developed a way to generate power using harmless viruses that convert
mechanical energy into electricity.
The scientists tested their approach by creating a generator that
produces enough current to operate a small liquid-crystal display. It
works by tapping a finger on a postage stamp-sized electrode coated with
specially engineered viruses. The viruses convert the force of the tap
into an electric charge.
Their generator is the first to produce electricity by harnessing the
piezoelectric properties of a biological material. Piezoelectricity is
the accumulation of a charge in a solid in response to mechanical
stress.
The milestone could lead to tiny devices that harvest electrical
energy from the vibrations of everyday tasks such as shutting a door or
climbing stairs.
It also points to a simpler way to make microelectronic devices.
That's because the viruses arrange themselves into an orderly film that
enables the generator to work. Self-assembly is a much sought after goal
in the finicky world of nanotechnology.
The scientists describe their work in a May 13 advance online publication of the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
"More research is needed, but our work is a promising first step
toward the development of personal power generators, actuators for use
in nano-devices, and other devices based on viral electronics," says
Seung-Wuk Lee, a faculty scientist in Berkeley Lab's Physical
Biosciences Division and a UC Berkeley associate professor of
bioengineering.
He conducted the research with a team that includes Ramamoorthy
Ramesh, a scientist in Berkeley Lab's Materials Sciences Division and a
professor of materials sciences, engineering, and physics at UC
Berkeley; and Byung Yang Lee of Berkeley Lab's Physical Biosciences
Division.
The piezoelectric effect was discovered in 1880 and has since been
found in crystals, ceramics, bone, proteins, and DNA. It's also been put
to use. Electric cigarette lighters and scanning probe microscopes
couldn't work without it, to name a few applications.
But the materials used to make piezoelectric devices are toxic and
very difficult to work with, which limits the widespread use of the
technology.
Lee and colleagues wondered if a virus studied in labs worldwide
offered a better way. The M13 bacteriophage only attacks bacteria and is
benign to people. Being a virus, it replicates itself by the millions
within hours, so there's always a steady supply. It's easy to
genetically engineer. And large numbers of the rod-shaped viruses
naturally orient themselves into well-ordered films, much the way that
chopsticks align themselves in a box.
These are the traits that scientists look for in a nano building
block. But the Berkeley Lab researchers first had to determine if the
M13 virus is piezoelectric. Lee turned to Ramesh, an expert in studying
the electrical properties of thin films at the nanoscale. They applied
an electrical field to a film of M13 viruses and watched what happened
using a special microscope. Helical proteins that coat the viruses
twisted and turned in response -- a sure sign of the piezoelectric
effect at work.
Next, the scientists increased the virus's piezoelectric strength.
They used genetic engineering to add four negatively charged amino acid
residues to one end of the helical proteins that coat the virus. These
residues increase the charge difference between the proteins' positive
and negative ends, which boosts the voltage of the virus.
The scientists further enhanced the system by stacking films composed
of single layers of the virus on top of each other. They found that a
stack about 20 layers thick exhibited the strongest piezoelectric
effect.
The only thing remaining to do was a demonstration test, so the
scientists fabricated a virus-based piezoelectric energy generator. They
created the conditions for genetically engineered viruses to
spontaneously organize into a multilayered film that measures about one
square centimeter. This film was then sandwiched between two gold-plated
electrodes, which were connected by wires to a liquid-crystal display.
When pressure is applied to the generator, it produces up to six
nanoamperes of current and 400 millivolts of potential. That's enough
current to flash the number "1" on the display, and about a quarter the
voltage of a triple A battery.
"We're now working on ways to improve on this proof-of-principle
demonstration," says Lee. "Because the tools of biotechnology enable
large-scale production of genetically modified viruses, piezoelectric
materials based on viruses could offer a simple route to novel
microelectronics in the future."
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